January 21, 2007

Alumni newsletter - January 2007

This edition of a newsletter sent to Alumni and Friends of CPsquare 3 or 4 times a year is another grab-bag of resources and tidbits about communities of practice. And it's also a reminder about two upcoming workshops, one in English and the other in German (beginning January 29 and April 30, respectively). I'd planned to publish it through the "friends of CPsquare" email list, but have found maddening technical problems with the list, so I'm resorting to alternative means.

ARTICLES

When people identify websites, pages or postings about the subject, many of us will tag them as such and you can see what's been tagged recently by "everybody" by checking one of these two links:
http://del.icio.us/tag/communitiesofpractice
http://del.icio.us/tag/communities_of_practice
A less current but perhaps more considred collection of resources is taking form here in a wiki with bibliographic resources on the subject. YOU are invited to contribute: http://cofpractice-biblio.wikispaces.com/ The hope is that it have the bulk of the most important resources and critical notes about the nature and importance of each resource.

BLOGS

A very diverse collection of ideas and reports can be had by looking at blogs by members of the CPsquare community. You will always find something surprising and often find things that are really interesting:
  http://www.cpsquare.org/member_blogs.htm 
The story about how this aggregation of blogs came to be is reported on my blog:
http://www.learningalliances.net/index.php/2006-08-25/a-feed-of-blogs
CPsquare organized a really great dialog in Florence, Italy last Fall. We had the fifth floor of a palazzo to ourselves for 3 days of great convesations and good food. Before and after the dialog we used a blog to support our self-organization and reporting processes:
http://pratodialogue.wordpress.com/
Beverly Trayner and I published an article about the idea of using technology to change the way we meet face-to-face (from a communities of practice point of view) in an ACM publication:
http://elearnmag.org/subpage.cfm?section=best_practices&article=34-1
A similar experiment where Nancy White used a blog to record a speaking tour in Australia is another interesting example of "exposing the practice" using technology. It contains handouts, pictures of food along the way, and even audience feedback:
http://australianoctober.blogspot.com
Etienne, Nancy White and I continue to plug away at our "technology for communities of Practice" report. It has turned out to be about how communities manage their infrastructure, particularly focused around the role of a technology steward. Here's a definition and some comments:
http://www.learningalliances.net/index.php/2006-12-15/definition-of-technology-steward

GLOBALIZATION

Much further afield, you might enjoy this article in The New Yorker about an Australian sociologist's efforts to help reframe the war in Iraq. A lot of interesting ideas about social interaction and learning:
http://www.newyorker.com/printables/fact/061218fa_fact2
At the other extreme from a communities of practice approach, consider the news about TutorVista, which offers unlimited tutoring in dozens of different subjects or for dozens of different tests:
http://www.tutorvista.com/press/mediacover.php

WORKSHOPS

The next offering of the Foundations workshop is scheduled to begin in ONE WEEK, on January 29th. If you know someone who's interested, please let them know:
http://www.cpsquare.org/edu/foundations/
There's a rather massive effort to present the workshop in German starting April 30th. If you or someone you know is interested, drop me a line:
http://www.cpsquare.org/edu/german/
Posted by smithjd at January 21, 2007 11:05 PM | TrackBack